I have a couple black Plymouths that are losing feathers. But everything I read said when molting it starts at the neck on down.
But they are losing their tail feathers and then more around the back area and not so much the neck area. My Road Island and Comets are not losing feathers. They are all 16 mths. old. Is this part of molting or should I be concerned? I had to put them all on antibiotics 2 weeks ago for a week for respiratory inf. and now this last week gave them vitamins and electrolytes. Any help on questions would be a great help.

I have a couple black Plymouths that are losing feathers. But everything I read said when molting it starts at the neck on down.
But they are losing their tail feathers and then more around the back area and not so much the neck area. My Road Island and Comets are not losing feathers. They are all 16 mths. old. Is this part of molting or should I be concerned? I had to put them all on antibiotics 2 weeks ago for a week for respiratory inf. and now this last week gave them vitamins and electrolytes. Any help on questions would be a great help.

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16 months is the age that most birds will begin molting, so molting is certainly a possibility. However, I would check them for external parasites, just to make sure those aren't causing the feather loss. Check under the wings and hackle and near the vent for any small moving black specks (mites) or larger yellow blobs (lice). If you see any, treat by dusting with a poultry mite/lice dust or Sevin.

thanks will check tomorrow a.m. Seven dust? Like you put on plants? Is poultry dust something you can find at a feed store. As you can tell I am new at this so don't know all the tricks or treatments. Just don't want to have any sick girls. Have gone through the respiratory thing already and they are my sweet girls.

thanks will check tomorrow a.m. Seven dust? Like you put on plants? Is poultry dust something you can find at a feed store. As you can tell I am new at this so don't know all the tricks or treatments. Just don't want to have any sick girls. Have gone through the respiratory thing already and they are my sweet girls.

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Yes, 5% or 10% Sevin dust like you put on plants. I'm not sure about the poultry dust; I've never used it, but I know that other people often recommend it. For non-laying birds, you can also apply Frontline Flea and Tick spray with a Q-tip to their skin, but that isn't licensed for use on poultry so it shouldn't be used on birds producing eggs for human consumption. Another treatment is diatamaceous earth, though that is more of a preventative measure than a fix for a large infestation.

thank you. I was putting the diatameaous (spelling) in there nests and in the coop and then ran out of it over a month ago. Which week or so after is when starting noticing this. So looks like I will need to be treating some girls. So if 2 of them is showing this then probably all of them are so best to treat all of them right. Thanks for the info.

aha! ^^^^that's what I was wondering (if they necessarily would have skin exposure with molting or if they could just lose feathers but not show balding/thinning spots) The bottom of the coop has got "Lucille" feathers all over--like someone has lost a pillow fight. I'll still make a check for pesties, though, in her armpits (wingpits lol), and if she'll let me her vent. last time I tried inspecting her, though, she was thoroughly offended and made a huge flap about it. she beat me soundly in the face with her wing feathers LOL so much for showing the kids how to hold her correctly so she wouldn't panic.

A couple of things. One kind of mite called roost mites only attack in the dark. Cowards! Evil things! They are afraid to face the light of day. Seriously, they live in cracks and such during the day and only attack at night. They will run away from a flashlight. You need to check them after dark and be reasonably quick. The vent area is a good place to check. They like the moisture there.

To go further on what Centrarchid said. Some chickens are fast molters. They dump a bunch of their feathers and really look rough. Lots of big bare spots. You’d think they’d freeze to death but they actually still handle cold weather pretty well. Then you have the slow molters. About the only way you can tell they are molting is that you see a lot of feathers around. Them being fast or slow molters has nothing to do with how fast the individual feather grows back. It has to do with how fast they lose their feathers so they can start growing them back.

Age has a bit to do with molting, but often that is a mini-molt. What causes a full blown molt this time of year is that the days are getting shorter. A lot of times pullets will skip the molt their first fall/winter, but practically every adult chicken not on artificial light will molt when the days get shorter.